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Following a 30-minute presentation from
Cray on his vision of the next generation of computers, the McDonnell
Douglas executives were asked if they had any questions. At first,
they were a little intimidated by the genius of the man before them.
But finally one of them asked: "Are you worried about competition
from IBM?"
It wasn't an unreasonable question,
but it obviously didn't set too well with Cray. With a sour look
on his face, he leaned back in his chair and put his hands behind
his head. After a long moment, he responded: "I'm not competing
with IBM. I'm competing with nature."
Cray's message was the same as Smith's:
If your only goal is to beat the next guy, you may win for a time.
But eventually someone will come along to beat you, and then where
will you be?
As an entrepreneur, your goal must be
to be the best you can be at whatever you are doing, not just better
than the next person. Treat customers the way they ought to be treated,
not just better than your competitor treats his customers. Produce
the best quality products you can possibly produce, not just products
that are better than the competition. Cultivate and train the most
professional sales staff, not just a staff that is superior to someone
else's. Don't judge yourself and your business by someone else's
standard or performance; set the standard. Establish the pattern.
Become the measuring stick. Don't settle for someone else's idea
of excellence; create your own, and practice it for its own sake,
not for the sake of being better than someone else.
The ability to do these things right
will set you apart from your competition and will build customer
loyalty that leads to long-term revenue growth. This loyalty will
enable you to retain your customers - even if someone else comes
along with a better product.
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